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<text id=93CT1649>
<link 93HT0686>
<link 93HT0328>
<link 93HT0015>
<link 90TT1426>
<link 89TT0434>
<title>
China--History
</title>
<history>
Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
East Asia
China
</history>
<article>
<source>CIA World Factbook</source>
<hdr>
History
</hdr>
<body>
<p>China's Early History
</p>
<p> China is one of the world's oldest continuous civilizations,
with historical records that date back nearly 3,500 years.
Successive dynasties developed a unique system of bureaucratic
control that gave the agrarian-based Chinese an advantage over
neighboring nomadic and hill cultures. The adoption of
Confucianism as the state ideology and a common written language
(that bridged the gap between the country's many local languages
and dialects) further strengthened China's development.
Whenever China was conquered by nomadic tribes, as it was by the
Mongols in the 13th century and the Manchus in the 17th, the
conquerors eventually adopted the ways of the "higher" Chinese
civilization and staffed the bureaucracy with Chinese.
</p>
<p> In 1644, the Manchus overthrew the native Ming dynasty and
established the Qing (Ch'ing) dynasty with Beijing as its
capital. At great expense in blood and treasure, the Manchus
gained control of many border areas over the next half century,
including Xinjiang, Yunnan, Tibet and Taiwan. The impressive
success of the early Qing period was based on the combination
of Manchu martial prowess and traditional Chinese bureaucratic
skills.
</p>
<p> During the 19th century, China experienced the challenge of
Western commercial penetration, massive social strife, economic
stagnation, and explosive population growth. The 1850s, and
1860s, the powerful Paiping and Nian (Nien) Rebellions, coupled
with Muslim separatist movements in eastern China, drained the
country's resources and almost toppled the dynasty. Following
the Opium Wars (1840-42), Britain and other Western powers
gained special privileges in five designated "treaty ports"
heralding an era of growing Western demands for increased
economic and political concessions from the Chinese. Although
some reform- minded Chinese officials argued for the adoption
of Western technology to counter further Western advances, the
Qing court refused to countenance significant changes. However,
China's humiliating defeat in 1895 by Japan, which had adopted
Western technology and other elements of Western culture,
convinced many Chinese of the need for major reforms. Efforts
in such directions, however, continued to be stymied by
conservative factions in the Qing court. These factions even
went so far as to support anti-foreign and anti-Christian secret
societies, which rampaged throughout north China in 1900, in an
attempt to rid the country of the Western presence. This
so-called "Boxer Rebellion" was eventually defeated by
expeditionary forces of the foreign powers.
</p>
<p>20th Century China
</p>
<p> Frustrated by the Qing court's anti-reform stance and
inspired by the ideas of Sun Yat-sen, young military officers
and students began after 1905 to advocate the overthrow of the
Qing dynasty and the establishment of a republic. A
revolutionary military uprising on October 10, 1911, spread
rapidly, leading to the abdication of the last Qing monarch.
To remove the dynasty without provoking civil war, the
revolutionaries and reformers agreed to let high Qing officials
retain prominent positions in the new republic. One of these
figures, General Yuan Shikai (Yuan Shih-k ai), became the
republic's first president. Before his death in 1916, Yuan
unsuccessfully attempted to name himself emperor. In the
aftermath, the republican government was all but shattered,
ushering in the "warlord era", when shifting coalitions of
provincial military leaders ruled and ravaged the country.
</p>
<p> In the 1920s, Sun Yat-sen established a revolutionary base
in south China and set out to unite the fragmented nation.
With Soviet assistance, he organized a new political party, the
Kuomintang (KMT or "Chinese Nationalist Party"), along Leninist
lines, and entered into a close alliance with the fledgling
Chinese Communist Party (CCP). After Sun's death in 1925, one
of his proteges, Chiang Kaishek, seized control of the DMT and
succeeded in bringing most of central China under his rule. In
1927, Chiang destroyed the CCP's party organization and
executed many of its leaders. The survivors fled into the
mountains of eastern China. Finally, driven out of their
mountain bases in 1934, the CCP forces embarked on the "Long
March" that took them across China's most desolate terrain to
the northwest, where they established headquarters at Yan'an in
Shanxi province.
</p>
<p> The bitter struggle between KMT and CCP forces continued
openly or clandestinely through the 14 years of Japanese
invasion (1931- 45) era, even though they nominally formed a
united front to oppose the Japanese invaders in 1937. Civil war
resumed after the Japanese defeat in 1945. By 1949, the CCP
occupied most of the country. Chiang Kai-shek fled with the
remnants of his KMT government and military forces to Taiwan,
where he proclaimed Taipei to be China's "provisional capital"
and vowed to reconquer the Chinese mainland. The KMT
authorities on Taiwan still call themselves the "Republic of
China" and assert that they constitute the sole legal government
of all China, including Taiwan.
</p>
<p>The People's Republic of China
</p>
<p> On October 1, 1949, Mao Zedong proclaimed the People's
Republic of China in Beijing. The new government assumed
control of a people exhausted by two generations of war and
social conflict, and an economy devastated by high inflation and
the disruption of the transportation and communications systems.
Chinese communist leaders quickly installed a new political and
economic order modeled on the Soviet example.
</p>
<p> In the early 1950s, China achieved impressive economic and
social rehabilitation. The government gained popular support
by curbing inflation, restoring the economy, and rebuilding many
war-damaged industrial plants. The CCP's authority reached into
almost every phase of Chinese life. Party control was assured
by strong, politically loyal security and military forces, a
government apparatus responsive to party direction, and ranks
of party members in labor, women's, and other mass
organizations.
</p>
<p>The Great Leap Forward and the Sino-Soviet Split
</p>
<p> In 1958, Beijing abandoned the Soviet model and announced a
new economic program, the "Great Leap Forward," aimed at
rapidly raising industrial and agricultural production above
the impressive gains already attained. Mao believed that
latent potential could be tapped by industrial decentralization
and a greater degree of collectivization of China's countryside.
Giant cooperatives (communes) were formed, and backyard
factories dotted the Chinese landscape. The results were
disastrous, as normal market mechanisms were disrupted and
China's people exhausted themselves producing shoddy, unsalable
goods. Within a year, the Chinese leadership retreated, blaming
poor planning and the weather, but an ensuing famine in the
countryside resulted in millions of deaths. Later, they were
also to blame the Soviets for economic sabotage.
</p>
<p> Already strained, Sino-Soviet relations deteriorated sharply
in 1959 when Moscow placed restrictions on the flow of
scientific and technological information to China and then
precipitously withdrew all of its advisers. In 1960, the
erstwhile allies began to spar openly in international forums.
</p>
<p>The Cultural Revolution
</p>
<p> In the early 1960s, State President Liu Shaoqi and his
protege, party General Secretary Deng Xiaoping, took over
direction of the party and adopted pragmatic economic policies
at variance with Mao's revolutionary vision. Dissatisfied with
this new direction, Party Chairman Mao launched a massive
political attack on Liu, Deng, and other pragmatists in the
spring of 1966. The new movement, called the "Great Proletarian
Cultural Revolution," set China on course of political and
social anarchy that lasted the better part of a decade.
</p>
<p> In the early stages of the Cultural Revolution, Mao and his
"closets comrade in arms," People's Liberation Army (PLA)
strongman Lin Biao and other radical supporters, charged Liu,
Deng, and other top party leaders with dragging China back
toward capitalism. Radical youth associations, called Red
Guards, attacked party and state organizations at all levels,
rooting out leaders who would not bend to the radical wind. In
reaction to this turmoil, some local PLA commanders and other
officials maneuvered to back Mao and his supporters outwardly
while actually taking steps to rein in local radical activity.
Gradually, the Chinese political situation stabilized along
complex factional lines. The leadership conflict came to a
head in September 1971, when Party Vice Chairman and Defense
Minister Lin Biao reportedly tried to stage a coup against Mao.
According to Chinese officials, Lin Biao later died in a plane
crash in Mongolia while allegedly fleeing the country.
</p>
<p> In the aftermath of the Lin Biao incident, many officials
criticized and dismissed during 1966-69 were reinstated. Deng
Xiaoping, chief among these, reemerged in 1973 and was
confirmed in 1975 to the concurrent posts of Politburo Standing
Committee member, PLA Chief of Staff,and Vice Premier. Deng and
other veteran officials dominated the Fourth National People's
Congress in January 1975. As Premier Zhou Enlai's health
slipped, Deng acted as Zhou's alter-ego.
</p>
<p> The conflict between veteran officials and the radicals
reemerged with a vengeance in late 1975. Mao's wife, Jiang
Qing, and three close Cultural Revolution-era associates (later
dubbed the "Gang of Four") launched a media campaign against
Deng. When Zhou died in January 1976, it was assumed that Deng
would take over the premiership. Instead, Minister of Public
Security Hua Guofeng was named Acting Premier in February. On
April 6, when the Beijing populace staged a spontaneous
demonstration in Beijing's Tiananmen Square in Zhou's memory--with strong political overtones in support of Deng--the
authorities forcibly suppressed it. Deng was blamed for the
disorder and stripped of all official positions, although he
retained his party membership.
</p>
<p>The Post-Mao Era
</p>
<p> Mao's death in September 1976 removed a towering figure from
Chinese politics and set off a scramble for succession. Hua
Guofeng was quickly confirmed as Party Chairman and Premier.
A month after Mao's death, Hua, backed by the PLA, arrested
Jiang Qing and other members of the "Gang of Four." AFter
extensive deliberations, the CCP leadership reinstated Deng
Xiaoping to all of his previous posts at the 11th Party Congress
in August 1977. This symbolized the growing consolidation of
control by veteran party officials strongly opposed to the
radicalism of the previous two decades.
</p>
<p> The post-11th Party Congress leadership has emphasized
economic development and renounced the mass political movements
of prior years. At the pivotal December 1978 Third Plenum (of
the 11th Central Committee), the leadership adopted new agrarian
policies aimed at expanding rural income and incentives,
endorsed experiments in enterprise autonomy and away from
central planning, and approved direct foreign investment in
China. The Third Plenum also decided to push the pace of legal
reform, culminating in the passage of several new legal codes
by the National People's Congress in June 1979.
</p>
<p> Beginning in 1979, the Chinese leadership moved toward more
pragmatic positions in almost all fields. The party encouraged
artists, writers, and journalists to adopt more critical
approaches, although it did not permit open attacks on party
authority. Former Sichuan Party Chief Zhao Ziyang succeeded
Hua Guofeng as Premier in 1980. Zhao had established a record
of pragmatic and forceful leadership in Sichuan. The Congress
also took other personnel measures to strengthen governmental
organization and loosen party control over day-to-day decision-
making at all levels. In late 1980, after a succession of
attacks on the Cultural Revolution, the party officially
proclaimed it to have been a catastrophe.
</p>
<p> Deng's efforts to institutionalize his policies advanced at
the 12th Party Congress in September 1982 as he appeared to
benefit from internal party changes. The Congress also
highlighted the importance of the economic modernization drive
declaring a goal of quadrupling the nations's gross national
product (GNP) by the year 2000. Finally, the National People's
Congress in December 1982 adopted a new state constitution, the
fourth since 1949. This new constitution replaces a much more
radically leftist document promulgated in 1978 by the
now-disgraced Hua Guofeng; it provides a legal framework for the
ongoing reforms in China's social and economic institutions and
practices.
</p>
<p> Efforts to reform the political structure, however, have
been less successful. Student demonstrators protested the slow
pace of political reform in December 1986. Deng's effort to
institutionalize the leadership succession also received a
major blow when Hu Yaobang, a protege of Deng and a leading
advocate of reform, was forced to resign as CCP General
Secretary in January 1987.
</p>
<p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs,
October 1987.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>